Transcription

1 3102 Business Telephone Guide for 3Com Asterisk Part Number Rev AB Published January 2008

2 3Com Corporation 350 Campus Drive Marlborough, MA Copyright , 3Com Corporation. All rights reserved. No part of this documentation may be reproduced in any form or by any means or used to make any derivative work (such as translation, transformation, or adaptation) without written permission from 3Com Corporation. 3Com Corporation reserves the right to revise this documentation and to make changes in content from time to time without obligation on the part of 3Com Corporation to provide notification of such revision or change. 3Com Corporation provides this documentation without warranty, term, or condition of any kind, either implied or expressed, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties, terms, or conditions of merchantability, satisfactory quality, and fitness for a particular purpose. 3Com may make improvements or changes in the product(s) and/or the program(s) described in this documentation at any time. If there is any software on removable media described in this documentation, it is furnished under a license agreement included with the product as a separate document, in the hardcopy documentation, or on the removable media in a directory file named LICENSE.TXT or!license.txt. If you are unable to locate a copy, please contact 3Com and a copy will be provided to you. UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT LEGEND If you are a United States government agency, then this documentation and the software described herein are provided to you subject to the following: All technical data and computer software are commercial in nature and developed solely at private expense. Software is delivered as Commercial Computer Software as defined in DFARS (June 1995) or as a commercial item as defined in FAR 2.101(a) and as such is provided with only such rights as are provided in 3Com s standard commercial license for the Software. Technical data is provided with limited rights only as provided in DFAR (Nov 1995) or FAR (June 1987), whichever is applicable. You agree not to remove or deface any portion of any legend provided on any licensed program or documentation contained in, or delivered to you in conjunction with, this guide. Portions Copyright Digium, Inc. TRADEMARKS Unless otherwise indicated, 3Com registered trademarks are registered in the United States and may or may not be registered in other countries. 3Com, and the 3Com logo are registered trademarks of 3Com Corporation. Asterisk and Digium are registered trademarks and Asterisk Business Edition, AsteriskNOW, AsteriskGUI, and Asterisk Appliance are trademarks of Digium, Inc. Adobe is a trademark and Adobe Acrobat is a registered trademark of Adobe Systems Incorporated. Firefox is a registered trademark of the Mozilla Foundation. Any other trademarks mentioned in the document are the property of their respective owners.

7 ABOUT THIS GUIDE This guide describes how to set up and use a 3Com 3102 Business Telephone with a 3Com Asterisk Appliance. CAUTION: The 3Com telephone system operates over the Ethernet local area network (LAN), not through a traditional telephone connection. Your telephone is connected to the 3Com Asterisk Appliance through an RJ45 Ethernet connector instead of through an RJ11 telephone connection. Your telephone will not work unless it is connected correctly. For information about installing your telephone, see Telephone Installation and Maintenance. Contact your administrator if you have questions about your telephone connection.

8 8 ABOUT THIS GUIDE Conventions Table 1 lists conventions that are used throughout this guide. Table 1 Icons Icon Type Description Information note Caution Warning Information about important features or instructions. Alerts you to potential loss of data or potential damage to an application, system, device, or network. Alerts you to potential personal injury. Comments Send comments about this guide or about any Voice product documentation to: Include the following information with your comments: Document title Document part number (found on the front page) Page number Your name and organization (optional) Please address all questions regarding the 3Com software to your authorized 3Com coordinator.

9 1 GETTING STARTED This chapter describes the steps you must complete to use your telephone and provides a general description of your telephone. For information about installing your telephone and connecting to the LAN and to the 3Com Asterisk Appliance, see Telephone Installation and Maintenance. This chapter includes the following topics: Configuration Overview Telephone Overview Configuration Options

10 10 CHAPTER 1: GETTING STARTED Configuration Overview This guide includes instructions about how to configure the IP settings manually on your telephone. (See Telephone Installation and Maintenance.) For information about how to use a DHCP server to configure telephones, see the 3Com Asterisk Appliance Administrator s Guide. Before you install your telephone, your administrator must assign an Asterisk account to you. This account includes a telephone extension and a voice mailbox. Your administrator also assigns a password that associates your telephone number and a voice mailbox with your account. If you are logged in, the Display Panel on your telephone shows the current date and time, and your extension. If you are not logged in, see Logging In to Your Telephone. Telephone Overview This guide describes the features available with your telephone, such as telephone button functions and making and forwarding calls. The settings on your telephone, including your extension, personal settings, and system settings, remain the same even when you move your telephone from one Ethernet jack to another, as long as both Ethernet connections are part of the same network. One of the benefits of network-based telephony is portability. Depending on how your administrator has configured the 3Com Asterisk Appliance, you may be allowed to configure another telephone in the system to duplicate your primary telephone simply by logging in to the other telephone using your password (see Transferring Your Telephone Settings to Another Telephone). Your telephone can provide many features. Some of these features are optional. Your administrator determines which features are available for your telephone.

11 Configuration Options 11 Configuration Options Simple telephone operations (for example, making a call, transferring a call, and putting a call on hold) require no configuration. These operations are described in Chapter 3. Many features, however, do require configuration (for example, call forwarding). In general, you can configure these features using the Telephone User Interface (TUI). The TUI is a phone-based interface that allows you to manage your user account and telephone by using the telephone keypad. You can enable or disable many features by entering a feature code. Configuration options and prompts appear on the telephone Display Panel. See Chapter 5 for more information about using the TUI. Basic telephone operation, such as making calls and putting a call on hold, is described in Chapter 3. Features that must be configured, such as call forwarding, are described in Chapter 5. Feature codes are described in Chapter 4. Some configuration procedures require that you log out of the telephone to change the telephone configuration (for example, setting the ringing tone). Before you can use the telephone, you must be logged in: If you are logged in, you hear the dial tone. You can make and receive telephone calls. If you are not logged in, you hear a high pitch tone. You cannot make or receive telephone calls. If a caller dials your extension, the call goes to voice mail. The telephone s Message Waiting Indicator (MWI) is not lit until you log in to the telephone.

12 12 CHAPTER 1: GETTING STARTED

13 2 BUSINESS TELEPHONE MODEL 3102 This chapter describes the buttons, controls, and features on the 3Com Model 3102 Business Telephone. This chapter includes the following topics: Buttons and Controls Access Buttons Status Lights Access Button Label To verify the model number of your telephone, refer to the label under the telephone.

14 14 CHAPTER 2: BUSINESS TELEPHONE MODEL 3102 Buttons and Controls Figure 1 shows the buttons and controls on the 3102 Business Telephone. Figure 1 3Com 3102 Business Telephone 1 Soft buttons Use the soft buttons to navigate through Display Panel options. A button s function depends on the option selected. The buttons are, left to right: Slct (Select) Use this button to select a displayed item. For example, you can use this button to automatically dial a previously placed or received call or a missed call. Back Use this button to move the cursor backwards one space and delete the current space. You can also use this button to sort displayed items. Exit Use this button to exit the currently displayed option. 2 Message Waiting Indicator (MWI) When lit, indicates that you have at least one unreviewed message (voice, , or fax) in your mailbox. Also, this indicator flashes when your telephone rings.

15 Buttons and Controls 15 3 Display Panel Displays the current date and time, telephone status messages, Caller ID information (if enabled), and the number of new messages (voice, , and fax) that you have in your mailbox (see Using the Telephone Display Panel for more information about how message status determines the message list). You can also use the Display Panel to view or enable features available through the Main menu (see Using the Telephone Display Panel) and with feature codes (see Chapter 4 for information about using feature codes). 4 Scroll buttons (Up, Down, Left, Right) Use the Up and Down buttons to scroll through items in the Display Panel. The Left and Right buttons are reserved for future use. See Viewing the Call Logs. 5 Program button Use this button to access and view the Display Panel Main menu. 6 Access buttons Buttons that are assigned specific features (for example, Do Not Disturb) or that control a line for incoming and outgoing calls. See Access Buttons. 7 Microphone (located on the side of the telephone) Activated when the telephone is in speaker phone mode; that is, after you press the Speaker button) or the Hands Free button. For best results, keep the area around the microphone free of obstructions. 8 Label area for Access buttons The telephone label for your Access buttons can be printed from this document. See Access Button Label. 9 Telephone key pad Use these buttons to dial telephone numbers and to access additional features. 10 Hold button Places a caller on hold. See Putting a Call on Hold 11 Transfer button Sends the currently active call to another telephone. See Transferring a Call. 12 Conference button Establishes a single call with up to three internal parties, external parties, or a combination of both. See Setting up a Conference Call. 13 Redial button Redials the last telephone number or extension that you called. 14 Speaker button Enables you to use the speaker phone feature. Press the Speaker button before you dial the call, when your telephone is ringing, or while a call is in progress. To turn the speaker phone off and resume the conversation, pick up the handset.

16 16 CHAPTER 2: BUSINESS TELEPHONE MODEL FWD MAIL button Directs all incoming calls, after one ring, to your call coverage point (by default, voice mail). See Configuring a Call Coverage Point. The light next to the FWD MAIL button remains red as long as this option is enabled. 16 MSG (Message) button and Message Waiting Light Press this button to access your messages through the voice mail system. The light next to the MWI light remains red as long as there is at least one new, unreviewed message (voice, , or fax) in your mailbox, or in a mailbox monitored by your telephone. 17 Hands Free button Allows you to answer internal (intercom) calls without picking up the handset. An external call (a call from outside your system) rings to your telephone as usual. See Using the Hands Free Feature. The light next to the Hands Free button remains red as long as this option is enabled. 18 Headset connector Located on the underside of the telephone, this RJ-11 connector enables you to plug in a headset so that you can listen to calls and have your hands free. See Using a Headset. To enable the use of a connected headset, press the Headset button (by default, button 16 at the top of the right column of buttons). 19 Volume down Lowers the volume of the ringer, the speaker, the handset, or the headset. See Controlling the Volume. 20 Mute button Use this button to prevent callers from hearing you, while still hearing your callers. See Muting Calls. 21 Volume up Raises the volume of the ringer, the speaker, the handset, or the headset. See Controlling the Volume. 22 Handset

17 Access Buttons 17 Access Buttons Figure 2 shows the 18 Access buttons on the telephone, which have been assigned default functions. Figure 2 Access Buttons 1 The first three buttons in this group (starting from the bottom) are lines for incoming and outgoing calls (System Appearance buttons SA1, SA2, and SA3). 2 Not used 3 Not used 4 Not used 5 Not used 6 Not used 7 Not used 8 Headset Transfers audio from the handset to an optional attached headset. 9 Handsfree Allows you to answer internal (intercom) calls without picking up the handset. To activate this feature, press the button before calls come in to your telephone. When the feature is enabled, the indicator is lit. When you receive an internal call, your telephone sounds a tone and then activates the speaker phone. 10 Do Not Disturb All incoming calls go directly to your voice mailbox without first ringing on the telephone. 11 Not used

18 18 CHAPTER 2: BUSINESS TELEPHONE MODEL Call History Enables you to view the last 10 missed, answered, or dialed calls on the Display Panel. See Viewing the Call Logs. 13 Feature button Allows you to access features that are not assigned to an Access button on your telephone. For more information about feature codes, see Chapter Forward to Voic Forward all incoming calls to your voice mailbox. 15 Cancel Press Cancel to cancel an action. 16 OK button Press the OK button to send a call. Status Lights An Access button that is set up for incoming and outgoing calls is called a System Appearance button. The light beside each System Appearance button indicates its status. See Table 2. Table 2 Status Lights for System Appearance Buttons If the light is Off Steady Blinking quickly Blinking slowly The line is Available for use In use Ringing On hold

21 3 BASIC TELEPHONE OPERATION This chapter includes the following topics: Logging In to Your Telephone Answering a Call Answering a Second Call Making Calls Terminating Calls Using the Telephone Display Panel Controlling the Volume Changing Ringing Tones Using the Hands Free Feature Using a Headset Putting a Call on Hold Transferring a Call Muting Calls Mute Ringer Activating Do Not Disturb Accessing Voice Mail

22 22 CHAPTER 3: BASIC TELEPHONE OPERATION Logging In to Your Telephone Your administrator assigns an extension (telephone number) and initial password to your telephone. To log in to your telephone: 1 Press Program or press Feature The Display Panel shows: Enter Password: 2 Enter your password and press #. If the password you entered is associated with the telephone extension, you are logged in and the Display Panel briefly shows: PBX1 Connected If the password you entered is not associated with the telephone extension or the extension has not yet been assigned to the telephone, the Display Panel shows: Use Program btn to login Wrong number or password In this case, use the following steps to log in to your telephone: 1 Press Program or press Feature The Display Panel shows: Local Phone Number: 2 Enter your extension and press #. If the Display Panel shows a previously assigned number that you want to replace, press the middle soft button under the Display Panel to move the cursor back one space. Repeat as necessary and then enter your extension and press #. 3 Enter your password and press #. Enter Password: Alternatively, to set a password locally, you can use the Password Stored Locally feature code (434), then enter the password. You can use this method in place of Step 1 above. See Chapter 4 for information about feature codes.

23 Answering a Call 23 Changing Your Password You must use the Telephone User Interface (TUI) and change the local password to match the password stored on the call processor by following these steps: 1 Press Program or press Feature The Display Panel shows: Enter Password: 2 Enter your new password and press #. The first digit of the password cannot be zero (0). The minimum password length is 4 digits; the maximum password length is 9 digits. Answering a Call To answer an incoming call, lift the handset. Alternatively, you can press the Speaker button. If you have enabled Handsfree Active on Intercom, you can simply speak to answer internal calls. If your telephone includes multiple access lines, press the Access button for the line on which the new call is arriving (the light next to the button will be flashing). Unanswered calls are sent to either your call coverage point which, by default, is your voice mailbox or your configured call forwarding destination. See Call Forwarding. Answering a Second Call When a new call arrives while you are on a call: 1 Press Hold to put the current call on hold. 2 Press the Access button for the line whose status light is blinking, indicating a new call. 3 To return to the earlier call, hang up the new call, or put it on hold, or transfer it, and then press the Access button for the original call. Making Calls This section describes standard dialing features.

24 24 CHAPTER 3: BASIC TELEPHONE OPERATION Making Internal Calls To dial an internal call: 1 Pick up the handset. Alternatively, you can press the Speaker button. You hear the dial tone. 2 Dial the extension. Alternatively, you can use the Display Panel to find and dial the name of the person whom you want to call in the call logs. 3 When you complete the call, hang up the handset. If you pressed the Speaker button, press it again to end the call. Redialing a Call To redial a number on your telephone: Pick up the handset and press Redial to dial the most recent number that you called. Use the Call Logs on the display panel to redial a recently missed, answered, or dialed call. Making External Calls To dial an external call: 1 Pick up the handset. Alternatively, you can press the Speaker button. You hear the dial tone. If necessary, dial the number required to access an external line (for example, 9). If one of the Access buttons is configured to access an external line directly, you can press that button. 2 Dial the number. Or use the display panel on a 3Com Telephone to scroll to Placed Calls, Received Calls, or Missed Calls. 3 When you finish speaking, hang up the handset. If you pressed the Speaker button, press it again to end the call. Class of Service Override The Class of Service Override feature allows you to apply the capabilities of your own telephone temporarily to another telephone on the same local network. For example, the telephone in a conference room may be configured to prevent long-distance telephone calls. You may, however, need to place a long-distance call during a meeting. If the permissions included with the Class of Service on your telephone allow long-distance calling, you can use the Class of Service Override feature to apply your telephone features to the conference room telephone for one call only.

25 Terminating Calls 25 To activate the one-call-only Class of Service Override from any telephone: 1 Pick up the handset. 2 Press Feature The Display Panel prompts you for the required input. 3 Enter your telephone extension. 4 Enter your password and press #. 5 Enter the destination number as you would from your own telephone. Terminating Calls You can terminate a call (hang up) by replacing the handset. Alternatively, if the call is on Speaker, turn the Speaker off by pressing the Speaker button. Using the Telephone Display Panel The Display Panel shows the current date and time, and your extension number. It can also show features that you have enabled. For example, if you enable the feature that forwards all incoming calls to your voice mailbox, the Display Panel shows Fwd Mail. The Display Panel can also list telephone status messages, Caller ID information (if enabled), and the number of new messages (voice, , and fax) that you have in your mailbox. If the Display Panel contains more than two lines of information, use the up and down scroll buttons to navigate through the display. The list of new messages in the Display Panel depends on the status of each message. A new message can be: Unreviewed An unreviewed message has never been listened to or acted upon (saved or deleted). Reviewed A reviewed message has been listened to but has not been acted upon (saved or deleted). A message may reach this state if you listen to the message and then hang up. The Display Panel shows the number of messages in your mailbox (and the Message Waiting Indicator is lit) only if you have at least one unreviewed message. If you review the last new message and do not act on it, the Display Panel shows the date and extension, and MWI is off. If

26 26 CHAPTER 3: BASIC TELEPHONE OPERATION your mailbox then receives a new message, the Display Panel shows the following (and MWI is lit): 2 Msgs 1 New. The 2 Msgs include the just received new, unreviewed message and the other message that is new but reviewed. The 1 New indicates the just received new, unreviewed message. The Display Panel also shows the number of missed calls. Missed calls include unreviewed messages in your mailbox and any other calls that you did not answer. For example, you can configure your default call coverage point to be no coverage. In this case, if you do not answer a call, when the call terminates the caller hears a busy tone and the call is not forwarded or sent to your mailbox. The Display Panel on your telephone shows Missed 1. If you press the first button below the Display Panel, you can scroll through the list of missed calls and to show you the name of the calling party. Press the button again to automatically dial the listed extension. You can also use the Display Panel to view or enable features available through the Main menu and with feature codes (see Chapter 4 for information about using feature codes). To access the Main menu, press the Program button, which is in the center of the scroll buttons. The display panel shows features: User Directory Not used. Call History Displays logs of your recent missed, answered, and dialed calls. See Viewing the Call Logs. Personal Speed Dial Not used. System Speed Dial Not used. Advanced Settings Configures network parameters, sets your telephone password and changes your login status. User Configuration Configures user settings. CAUTION: Network parameter options are for administrator use only. Unauthorized changes to network parameters will disconnect your telephone. Controlling the Volume Use the Volume Control buttons to raise or lower the volume of the ringer, handset, or speaker.

27 Changing Ringing Tones 27 Adjusting the volume control of one device DOES NOT affect the volume control of the other devices. For example, lowering the volume of the speaker has no effect on the handset volume. Changes you make to any device remain in effect if you reset the telephone to its default settings. Ringer Volume To raise or lower the volume of the ring, press the up or down Volume Control button repeatedly while your telephone is ringing, until the volume is at the level that you prefer. Handset Volume To raise or lower the volume of the dial tone and the voice level of your callers, lift the handset then press the up or down Volume Control buttons repeatedly until the volume is at the level you prefer. You can change the volume during a conversation or by listening to the dial tone. Headset Volume During a call, press the up or down Volume Control buttons repeatedly until the volume is at the level you prefer. Speaker Volume To raise or lower the volume of the speaker, press the Speaker button and then press the up or down Volume Control button repeatedly until the volume is at the level you prefer. You can change the volume during a conversation or by pressing Speaker and listening to the dial tone. When you press a Volume Control button, the Display Panel shows the volume setting as a series of dark vertical bars. Repeatedly pressing a Volume Control button raises the volume (increases the number of displayed bars) or lowers the volume (decreases the number of displayed bars. You can also use Feature Codes to adjust the volume. Pressing Feature raises the volume (increases the number of displayed bars by one). Pressing Feature lowers the volume (decreases the number of displayed bars by one). Changing Ringing Tones You can change the ringing or alert tone of your telephone. There are 10 choices, which include 9 audible tones and a silent alert. For the silent alert, choose number 10. When you set this alert tone, the display panel shows: Silence Alert Tone Selec

28 28 CHAPTER 3: BASIC TELEPHONE OPERATION When the telephone receives a call, there is no audible ringing tone. The Message Waiting Indicator and a System Appearance button flash to indicate that you have an incoming call. To change the ringing tone: 1 Log out of the telephone; press Program Press Program The Display Panel shows which ringing tone the telephone uses, for example: Alert Tone 1-10: 7 3 Use the middle soft key under the Display Panel to delete the current ringing tone number. 4 Enter a new tone number between 1 and 10 and then press the # key. 5 Log in to the telephone; press Program and then enter the telephone s password. You will hear a new ringing tone the next time you receive a call. Using the Hands Free Feature You can use your telephone as an intercom. You can answer internal (intercom) calls without picking up the handset. When you receive an internal call, your telephone sounds a tone and activates the speaker phone. You cannot use this feature with external calls (a call from outside your local call processor) or Anonymous (blocked caller ID) calls. These calls ring to your telephone as usual. To enable or disable the Hands Free feature, press the Hands Free button or the button on the telephone before calls arrive. The red light next to the button comes on (enabled) or goes out (disabled). You can also enable and disable Hands Free by using Feature Code 100. See Feature Codes. Using a Headset The telephone has a headset jack located on the underside of the telephone.

29 Using a Headset 29 To prepare the headset for all calls: 1 Plug the headset connector into the headset jack on the underside of the telephone. 2 Verify that the indicator light next to the Headset button comes on. To answer a call when you are using the headset: 1 Put the headset on. When a call comes in, press the System Appearance button beside the flashing light.you are connected to the call. The handset can be either on hook or off hook. 2 To end a call when you are using the headset, press the Cancel Access button on the telephone. Returning to the Headset After a Long Delay Certain brands of headsets enter a power-saving mode that prevents the telephone from ringing for one or more calls when both of these conditions are true: The headset amplifier buttons for Mute and On are both set to On. The handset is off the telephone for a long time (for example, overnight). It may take a few minutes for your headset to return from the power-saving mode to the active mode when calls first come in, so your telephone may not ring until the headset has returned to active mode, and you may miss a call. If you plan to not use the headset for a long time, 3Com recommends that you set the mute and headset buttons on the amplifier to Off and hang up the handset on your telephone. When you are ready to receive calls again, set up the headset for receiving calls: 1 Pick up the handset on your telephone and set it on your desk. 2 Put on the headset. 3 On the amplifier, set the headset button to On.

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